Why would they do that? They spent a lot of money to develop the engines. Hired several experienced F1 engine designers. As a bonus they got Ford on board as well. And by all accounts the development is going fine.
Why would they do that? They spent a lot of money to develop the engines. Hired several experienced F1 engine designers. As a bonus they got Ford on board as well. And by all accounts the development is going fine.
By " current rules " I meant current proposed iteration of 2026 rules since it tends to change depending on the week's whim
I guess they could add a mandatory paintjob rule. Then problem solved.Macklaren wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 1:09 pmAre we going to get 11 black cars next year with colored mirrors? CHANGE THE RULES!
https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-t ... /10720824/
You might have said it. It wasn't proven true. And I don't expect it to be come 2026.TeamKoolGreen wrote: ↑Sat May 10, 2025 9:15 pmAs I said a year ago , the 2026 cars will be heavier than today's cars. Lowering the weight limit doesn't make cars lighter. Especially when you make the batteries bigger.
And yes , there will be 20 black cars. And all 20 will still be heavier than the 2025 cars
The ICE has power in abundance. It will be a question of opportunity and fuel consumption to scavenge enough energy.
I suspect the ICE units will be more powerful then what the FIA wants. I know the FIA stipulated 350kw to be 50/50 with the battey but I suspect that most of the engines will have at least 400-450kw and some maybe close to 500kw by Melbourne next year.mzso wrote: ↑Sun May 11, 2025 9:56 amThe ICE has power in abundance. It will be a question of opportunity and fuel consumption to scavenge enough energy.
I can imagine them going with much undersized batteries in Monza. Though it would be tricky to introduce an undersized storage units, useful for just a few races.
The batteries are basically spec. As the ice is. You can't opt for an inline 4 for certain races eithermzso wrote: ↑Sun May 11, 2025 9:56 amThe ICE has power in abundance. It will be a question of opportunity and fuel consumption to scavenge enough energy.
I can imagine them going with much undersized batteries in Monza. Though it would be tricky to introduce an undersized storage units, useful for just a few races.
'much bigger' batteries ?TeamKoolGreen wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 5:49 am...And by some miracle these cars with much bigger batteries and power units will somehow weigh less than cars with smaller batteries and power units.
Not what I remember. There's maximum allowed energy usage and weight limitsTeamKoolGreen wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 5:49 amThe batteries are basically spec. As the ice is. You can't opt for an inline 4 for certain races eithermzso wrote: ↑Sun May 11, 2025 9:56 amThe ICE has power in abundance. It will be a question of opportunity and fuel consumption to scavenge enough energy.
I can imagine them going with much undersized batteries in Monza. Though it would be tricky to introduce an undersized storage units, useful for just a few races.
I hope I'm wrong. And by some miracle these cars with much bigger batteries and power units will somehow weigh less than cars with smaller batteries and power units.
How do you expect them to produce an ICE that is significantly MORE effecient than what they have now after the FIA cut out several of the main drivers of the current engine efficiency. To get 500kw out of the 2026 ICE, you would need it to get about 8% more bang out of the fuel than the current ICE does, all while being significantly less complex.carisi2k wrote: ↑Sun May 11, 2025 9:46 pmI suspect the ICE units will be more powerful then what the FIA wants. I know the FIA stipulated 350kw to be 50/50 with the battey but I suspect that most of the engines will have at least 400-450kw and some maybe close to 500kw by Melbourne next year.mzso wrote: ↑Sun May 11, 2025 9:56 amThe ICE has power in abundance. It will be a question of opportunity and fuel consumption to scavenge enough energy.
I can imagine them going with much undersized batteries in Monza. Though it would be tricky to introduce an undersized storage units, useful for just a few races.
The current engines have been frozen for 4 years. Surely the PU manufacturers will find new ways. Kinetic only energy recovery just isn't going to provide enough energy to the battery. The current K was only responsible for 60kw of the current 120kw recovery and it couldn't even provide that on certain circuits so how will the K now regenerate all 350kw of that energy without adding recovery from the front axle. The Gen 2 formula e could only generate 250kw from an electric platform racing on circuits dedicated to maximizing that recovery. Formula 1 doesn't have that with much larger circuits with higher speeds.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 10:55 amHow do you expect them to produce an ICE that is significantly MORE effecient than what they have now after the FIA cut out several of the main drivers of the current engine efficiency. To get 500kw out of the 2026 ICE, you would need it to get about 8% more bang out of the fuel than the current ICE does, all while being significantly less complex.carisi2k wrote: ↑Sun May 11, 2025 9:46 pmI suspect the ICE units will be more powerful then what the FIA wants. I know the FIA stipulated 350kw to be 50/50 with the battey but I suspect that most of the engines will have at least 400-450kw and some maybe close to 500kw by Melbourne next year.mzso wrote: ↑Sun May 11, 2025 9:56 am
The ICE has power in abundance. It will be a question of opportunity and fuel consumption to scavenge enough energy.
I can imagine them going with much undersized batteries in Monza. Though it would be tricky to introduce an undersized storage units, useful for just a few races.
That isn't happening. I would be extremely impressed if they even matched the 2025 ICE for efficiency, let alone massively surpassed it.